New adventures in the dialectic of humanism: Todorov, sebald and Agamben

Critical Horizons 9 (2):189-213 (2008)
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Abstract

This paper attempts to assess the state of the contemporary debate over humanism. Beginning with a brief recap of the main historical meanings of the concept of humanism itself, it details both the most recent articulation of the humanist standpoint in the work of Tzvetan Todorov and his "critical humanism" and the most potent anti-humanist replies in W.G. Sebald and Giorgio Agamben. While concerned to critically evaluate these new constellations of the debate, its main contention is not to wholly endorse either position nor to consign the opposition itself to the past but rather to explain why this has not happened and consider where the figure of humanism stands today.

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John Grumley
University of Sydney

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